Ibrahim
urged Muslim minorities in other European countries to follow suit as
"such donations help improve the morale of the Palestinian people
enormously."
"The
Palestinian children are taking the brunt of this crisis as their
fathers have not received salaries over the past three months,"
Ibrahim noted.
A
UN report released Wednesday, April 19, warned that unemployment and
poverty levels are set to sharply rise in the occupied Palestinian
territories if the new Palestinian government failed to survive the
current financial crisis.
The
document said the Palestinian Authority employees could lose their
incomes, raising the poverty level to 67 percent in 2006 and going as
high as 74 percent by 2008.
Ibrahim
thanked the Austrian government for facilitating aid transfer to the
Palestinian territories.
"The
Foreign Ministry is indeed forthcoming in resolving problems we come
across; but the Israeli occupation is the main stumbling block to our
effort," he said.
Islam,
which was officially acknowledged in Austria in 1912, is considered the
second religion in the country after Catholic Christianity.
Muslims
are estimated at 400,000 in Austria, making up 4% of the country's 8
million population.
Arab
Donations
Arab
donations for the Palestinians, meanwhile, continued after a couple of
Gulf and Middle East countries took the initiative earlier this week.
The
Arab Monetary Fund (AMF) said Thursday, April 20, it will funnel about
$50 million into projects to ease the hardships facing the Palestinians.
Qatar
was the first Arab country to announce on Monday, April 17, giving $50
million in aid to the Palestinian Authority.
Iran
also announced that it was giving $100 million in aid to the new
Palestinian government, doubling the initial figure it pledged.
A
source close to the delegation that accompanied Palestinian Foreign
Minister Mahmoud Al-Zahar in his recent multi-leg Arab tour said Saudi
Arabia intended to honor its 92-million-dollar pledge it made in the
Arab summit in Khartoum, according to the London-based Al-Hayat
newspaper.
Syria
also set April 30 as a "day of solidarity" for making
donations for the Palestinians.
The
Arab League has raised up so far up to $71 million from an Arab
grassroots donation call it voiced earlier this month, according to the
Palestinian Authority.
The
Itlaf Al-Kheir, which has up to 56 affiliate organizations in the Muslim
world, has also launched a similar campaign, starting with Algeria.